To gain insight into the importance of carefully selecting the sampling area for intestinal microbiota studies, cecal and fecal microbial communities of Caldes meat rabbit were characterized. The animals involved in the study were divided in two groups according to the feed intake level they received during the fattening period; ad libitum (n = 10) or restricted to 75% of ad libitum intake (n = 11). Cecum and internal hard feces were sampled from sacrificed animals. Assessment of bacterial and archaeal populations was performed by means of Illumina sequencing of 16S rRNA gene amplicons in a MiSeq platform. A total of 596 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) were detected using QIIME software. Taxonomic assignment revealed that microbial diversity was dominated by phyla Firmicutes (76.42%), Tenericutes (7.83%), and Bacteroidetes (7.42%); kingdom Archaea was presented at low percentage (0.61%). No significant differences were detected between sampling origins in microbial diversity or richness assessed using two alpha-diversity indexes: Shannon and the observed number of OTUs. However, the analysis of variance at genus level revealed a higher presence of genera Clostridium, Anaerofustis, Blautia, Akkermansia, rc4-4, and Bacteroides in cecal samples. By contrast, genera Oscillospira and Coprococcus were found to be overrepresented in feces, suggesting that bacterial species of these genera would act as fermenters at the end of feed digestion process. At the lowest taxonomic level, 83 and 97 OTUs in feces and cecum, respectively, were differentially represented. Multivariate statistical assessment revealed that sparse partial least squares discriminant analysis (sPLS-DA) was the best approach for this purpose. Interestingly, the majority of the most discriminative OTUs selected by sPLS-DA were found to be differentially represented between sampling origins in univariate analysis. Our study provides evidence that the choice of intestinal sampling area is relevant due to important differences in some taxa’s relative abundance that have been revealed between rabbits’ cecal and fecal microbiota. An appropriate sampling intestinal area should be chosen in each microbiota assessment.
1 Red wine intake is associated with a low risk of cardiovascular disease. This e ect has been partly attributed to the action of polyphenolic compounds, which decrease the oxidation of plasma low density lipoproteins. Moreover, nitric oxide ( . NO) is a vasodilator and polyphenolic compounds induce endothelium-dependent vasorelaxation in vitro. 2 Here we studied whether a diet rich in dealcoholated red wine (DRW) increases acetylcholineinduced vasorelaxation and whether ingestion of DRW-, quercetin-or catechin-rich diets modi®es the . NO-cyclic guanosine-3',5'-monophosphate (cyclic GMP) pathway and superoxide anion (O 2 .7 ) release in aorta in a resting state in rats fed semi-puri®ed diets containing either 35% (v w 71 ) DRW, 0.3% (w w 71 ) quercetin or 0.3% (w w 71 ) catechin for 10 days. 3 . NO-mediated vasorelaxation induced by acetylcholine was greater in rats fed the DRW-rich diet than in those that received the control diet. 4 Expression of endothelial . NO synthase (eNOS) was similar in the four dietary groups. The aortic rings of rats fed either the DRW-, quercetin-, or catechin-rich diets showed higher NOS activity, . NO production and cyclic GMP content than those of rats fed the control diet. No changes were observed in O 2 .7 production. 5 In summary, diets rich in either DRW, quercetin or catechin induced endothelium-dependent vasorelaxation in rat aorta in a resting state through the enhancement of . NO production, without modifying O 2 .7 generation, thus the bioavailability of . NO was increased. The increase in the . NOcyclic GMP pathway explains the bene®cial e ect of¯avonoids at vascular level. British Journal of Pharmacology (2002) 135, 910 ± 916
An evaluation of a new maternal line (LP) of rabbits was carried out. This new line was founded following a scheme similar to that applied in the selection for hyperprolificacy in rabbits or pigs. In this case, the selection criteria were hyperlongevity and an independent culling level near the average for prolificacy. Evaluation was carried out by comparison of the reproductive and longevity performance of the LP line with another maternal line recognized for good reproductive performance and standard longevity (V line). The results indicate that the LP line could be a valuable resource for inclusion in the current 3-way cross schema used in rabbit production, because females showed better survival ability and nearly the same prolificacy as the well-reputed V line. A V doe was 1.3 times more likely to leave the herd than an LP doe, and the probability of the differences in prolificacy between lines being greater than 0 was not extreme (no more than 0.22). Differences in relative performance of the lines were observed across farms for prolificacy, longevity, cumulative production, and fertility; however, based on deviance information criterion results, the data supported the hypothesis of only these differences being generated under a genotype x environment interaction for prolificacy traits. The longer productive life of LP females could partially be understood as an indication of success of the selection procedure during the foundation of this line.
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